Cancer immunotherapy is built on a simple but powerful idea: the immune system can recognize and destroy cancer cells if it ...
T cells, which target infection and disease, can become more effective after a meal. The finding might help improve ...
Activated immune cells secrete tiny capsules bearing DNA that can enter other immune and tumor cells to stimulate the body's defense systems, according to a study led by investigators at Weill Cornell ...
Infection-fighting T cells from people who have eaten recently can proliferate more quickly in response to threats.
Scientists at Weill Cornell Medicine have uncovered a previously unknown way the immune system fights cancer — and the ...
New research published in Nature reveals that eating can temporarily enhance T cell function, giving immune cells a metabolic edge that may improve infection defense and cancer immunotherapy outcomes.
Researchers from The University of Osaka have discovered a new class of antibodies, called iTabs, that naturally suppress ...
Artificial intelligence is increasingly being used to help scientists accelerate drug discovery and search for new treatments ...
We also report on a new use for artificial intelligence that could help eliminate some racial inequities in heart disease ...
Immunotherapy has transformed the field of medicine. In the context of cancer, immune cells become dysregulated and lose the ability to recognize and target the tumor. The tumor reshapes its ...